Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 889South Africa
Thungela Operations (Pty) v Ltd Xakwa Coal (Pty) Ltd and Others (24010/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 889 (18 November 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Withdrawal of application – despite this each party to pay its own costs – applicant justified in having pursued relief until a directive in terms of the National Water Act has been issued.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Thungela Operations (Pty) v Ltd Xakwa Coal (Pty) Ltd and Others (24010/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 889 (18 November 2022)
Thungela Operations (Pty) v Ltd Xakwa Coal (Pty) Ltd and Others (24010/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 889 (18 November 2022)
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sino date 18 November 2022
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 24010/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
18 NOVEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
THUNGELA
OPERATIONS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
XAKWA
COAL (PTY)
LTD
First
Respondent
WEALTHAGE
HOUSE OF CAPITAL PTY LTD
Second
Respondent
BENTECH
MINING (PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
THABO
MACHETE
Fourth
Respondent
MINISTER
OF WATER AND SANITATION
Fifth
Respondent
MINISTER
OF MINERAL RESOURCES AND ENERGY
Sixth
Respondent
Summary
:
Withdrawal of application – despite this each party to pay its
own costs – applicant justified
in having pursued relief until
a directive in terms of the National Water Act has been issued.
ORDER
The
applicant and the fourth respondent shall each pay its own costs.
J
U D G M E N T
This
matter has been heard in open court and is otherwise disposed of in
terms of the Directives of the Judge President of this
Division. The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
On 17 May 2022 Fourie J delivered a
judgment in respect of the initial hearing of this matter. At the
conclusion of the judgment,
the applicant’s application against
two erstwhile holders of mining permits on the property adjacent to
that of the applicant
was dismissed. At the same time, interim
interdicts were granted against two other respondents, being another
mining company and
the neighbouring landowner, the fourth respondent,
on an unopposed basis. The fourth respondent subsequently entered the
fray and
opposed the granting of the final interdict. Before the
matter could be heard on an extended return day, the Department of
Water
and Sanitation (DWS) had issued a directive against the fourth
respondent in terms of sections 19(3) and 53(1) of the National Water
Act 36 of 1998 (NWA). The applicant, being of the view that this
intervention obviated the need for a final court order, subsequently
withdrew its application. In the final instance, the matter then
proceeded in respect of the issue of costs only.
The
principles pertaining to costs when a matter is withdrawn
[2]
The
general principle is that a party withdrawing an application launched
by it becomes liable, as an unsuccessful litigant to pay
the costs of
the proceedings initiated by it
[1]
.
[3]
Following
Germishuys
,
it has been held that
“…
it
is only in exceptional circumstances that a party that has been put
to the expense of opposing withdrawn proceedings will not
be entitled
to all the costs caused thereby
”
[2]
.
[4]
The
court, however, retains a discretion to “deprive” the
successful party, that is the party against whom the application
was
initially launched, of its costs
[3]
.
[5]
The
above principles do not detract from or limit a court’s
ordinary discretion
[4]
.
[6]
In exercising its discretion, which is to
be exercised judicially, a court
“…
should
have due regard to the question whether, objectively viewed, the
applicant [had] acted reasonably in launching the main proceedings
but was subsequently driven to withdraw it in order to save costs
because facts emerging for the first time from, for instance,
the
respondent’s answering affidavit in the main proceedings or
because the relief was no longer necessary or obtainable
because of
developments taking place after the launching of the main
proceedings
[5]
”
.
[7]
The last-mentioned comment quoted above,
was made by the learned authors of
Erasmus
with reference to
Wildlife &
Environmental Society of SA v MEC for Economic Affairs, Environment &
Tourism, Eastern Cape and Others
2005
(6) SA 123
(ECD) (
Wildlife
).
In that matter, the additional considerations were whether applicants
who seek to enforce Constitutional rights, particularly
for the sake
of protection of the environment and who sought to obtain relief in
the public interest, should be spared costs orders,
should they
withdraw their applications. These considerations also apply to the
present matter.
Summary
of background facts
[8]
The adjacent properties in question are
portions of the Farm Kromdraai 297 JS Emalahleni situated in
Mpumalanga. The applicant’s
properties have loosely been
referred to as portions 10 and 11 and the fourth respondent’s
property as portion 23.
[9]
The history of the matter regarding these
two sets of properties have been set out by Fourie J in his judgment
and it is not necessary
to repeat that here. What has, however,
become clearer by way of papers delivered since his judgment, is that
mine-impacted water
is continually being discharged from a dam on the
fourth respondent’s property into the environs thereof.
[10]
Due principally to historical mining
operations on the sets of adjacent properties, the underground mining
pillars between the properties
have either become compromised or may
have been breached, resulting in inter-mine flow of mine impacted
drainage.
[11]
There is a dispute as to whether there is
drainage or surface seepage of such water from the applicant’s
properties to the
fourth respondent’s property or not. The fact
of the matter is however, that the applicant has taken steps to
contain the
discharge of mine-impacted water from its property and/or
its mining operations while the fourth respondent’s attempts to
do the same, has fallen short, particularly in respect of the water
flowing from dam 2 on the edge of the old Xakwa mine on its
property.
While measures taken by the fourth respondent appear to have been
successful in respect of the remainder of its property,
the discharge
or overflow from the Xakwa dam continued virtually unabated.
A
brief history of the litigation
[12]
The applicant launched its application on
an urgent basis, intending for it to be heard on 10 May 2022. In the
end, it was heard
on 12 and 13 May 2022. The relief sought was to
interdict the respondents (which expressly included the fourth
respondent) from
“…
discharging
or permitting the discharge …
”
of mine-impacted water from the fourth respondent’s property
onto adjacent properties, erosion trenches, the applicant’s
water holding and treatment facility or “
causing
… significant pollution and degradation and erosion of the
environment …
”. The
applicant also sought an order directing the respondents to fulfil
their duties of care contemplated in section 28
of the National
Environmental Management Act 107 of 1998 (NEMA) and the NWA.
[13]
The rule nisi issued by Fourie J on 17 May
2022, returnable on 14 July 2022, contained the relief as claimed by
the applicant, as
an interim order with immediate effect.
[14]
Ten days later, on 24 May 2022 the DWS,
whose Minister had been cited as the fifth respondent, issued a
notice of intention to issue
a directive in terms of sections 19(3)
and 53(1) of the NWA, to the third and fourth respondents.
[15]
On 28 June 2022 the fourth respondents made
representations to the DWS in response to the aforesaid notice and
thereafter delivered
its answering affidavit in the present matter on
8 July 2022.
[16]
On the initial return day of the rule nisi,
the interim order was confirmed against the third respondent and the
rule nisi was extended
to 15 September 2022. The very next day the
DWS conducted follow-up inspections on the fourth respondent’s
property. Hereafter,
on 8 August 2022 the fourth respondent delivered
a supplementary answering affidavit.
[17]
On 14 September 2022, being the day before
the extended return day of the rule nisi, the DWS, under signature of
the Provincial
Head, Mpumalanga Provincial Operations, issued a
directive in terms of the relevant sections of the NWA to the third
and fourth
respondents, requiring them to provide authorisations for
their water use and to immediately stop any unlawful use upon failure
to provide such authorization and to:
“
3.
Provide a written corrective Plan of Action (PoA) in which you
specify measures that will be employed by the mine
to manage the
pollution of Acid Mine Drainage emanating from the pits within
fourteen (14) working days of the receipt of this
directive.
4.
Appoint a suitably registered professional to compile a
rehabilitation plan for all the affected areas (pits,
nearby water
resources and the environment) within thirty (30) working days upon
receipt of the directive which must be submitted
to the Department
for recommendation. The rehabilitation plan must entail amongst-
others; the nature and extent of the impact
that the water se
activities have had or may have on the water resources and measures
that will be implemented to remediate or
mitigate the impacts with
clear timeframes and descriptions of how and when each
remedial/mitigation action will be implemented.
5.
The rehabilitation plan must further indicate the cost estimated of
the entire rehabilitation process; and
6.
Implement all the recommendations contained in the rehabilitation
plan and rehabilitate the areas affected
by the water use activities
within thirty (30) working days of the Departmental recommendation of
the Rehabilitation Plan
”
.
[18]
Subsequent to the above, the rule nisi was
further extended to 7 November 2022, on which date the applicant did
not persist with
seeking confirmation of the rule nisi. This
intention had been conveyed to the fourth respondent’s
attorneys shortly before,
resulting in a dispute about costs. The
applicant’s position had been set out in heads of argument
delivered on its behalf
as follows:
“
The
effect of the DWS Directive is that it is no longer necessary to
obtain a final interdict against the fourth respondent. In
the notice
of motion [the applicant] had sought the interim interdict against
the respondents pending compliance in full with the
DWS directives.
It has taken the DWS four months to issue the Directive. But, in any
event, [the applicant] had always recognized
that the DWS is the
proper authority that is empowered to compel the fourth respondent
(and any persons responsible for the pollution)
to take steps to
ensure that the discharge of the mine-impacted water is stopped. It
is now for the DWS to ensure that the fourth
respondent complies with
the Directives. For that reason the applicant no longer intends on
pursuing the relief which it sought
in this application against the
fourth respondent
”.
Evaluation
[19]
The fourth respondent contended forcefully,
both in its papers and by way of argument in court, that the influx
of water into the
Xakwa dam emanates from the applicant’s
properties. It relied on the opinion of a hydrologist in this regard
and the fact
that it (and/or the third respondent) had stopped
pumping water into dam 2 of the old Xakwa mine, yet the water levels
continued
to rise. It alleged that the applicant had conceded that
the water in question emanated from its properties.
[20]
Dealing with the last-mentioned contention
first: on my reading of the papers, the applicant only conceded that
there was inter-mine
flow of water due to the boundary pillars of
mining activities not having been observed or maintained. It however
continued to
deny the fourth respondent’s contentions. In fact,
the applicant’s experts asserted that the lowest point in the
underground
mining activities (described as the seam floor) was on
the applicant’s properties and that there “…
is
a depression from portion 23 [the fourth respondent’s property]
into portion 11 [the applicant’s property]
”.
The seepage of groundwater and direction of the flow of sub-surface
water is also disputed. The purported concession relied
on by the
fourth respondent is therefore either disputed or by no means
unequivocal.
[21]
In
argument in court, much was also made by the applicant of the fact
that the duties imposed on a landowner in terms of NEMA, obliged
it
to manage water on its property to prevent pollution or degradation,
irrespective of the source of the water
[6]
.
[22]
I need not finally determine these issues
as the applicant is no longer seeking relief against the fourth
respondent and neither
did the fourth respondent persist with a
counter-application alluded to in its opposing papers. I therefore
need not determine
the factual issues regarding the source or origin
of the water flow (which the fourth respondent in any event contends
cannot be
determined without oral evidence), I need only determine
whether the launch of the application had been reasonable in the
circumstances.
The overflow of water from the “old Xakwa mine
pit” (dam 2) had been common cause prior to the launch of the
application
and where it is apparent that this had not been
contained, I find that the applicant had reasonable cause to launch
the application.
In the absence of action by the DWS to stop the
discharge of such mine-impacted water, it was not unreasonable for
the applicant
to have kept the application “alive” even
after delivery of the fourth respondent’s answering affidavit,
from
which contents the admission of the discharge appeared, albeit
that it was coupled with a disputed accusation as to the cause
thereof.
[23]
In addition to the above, in
Wildlife
the court accepted the argument that a party relying on the
enforcement of the duties imposed by NEMA, should not necessarily
carry the burden of costs in the event of it being unsuccessful.
Section 32(2) of NEMA provides as follows:
“
A
court may decide not to award cost against a person who, or group of
persons which, fails to secure the relief sought in respect
of any
breach of threatened breach of any provision concerned with the
protection of the environment or the use of natural resources
if the
court is of the opinion that the person or group of persons acted
reasonably out of a concern for the public interest or
in the
interest of protecting the environment and had made due efforts to
use other means reasonably available for obtaining the
relief
sought
”.
[24]
In
seeking the enforcement of the duties imposed by section 28 of NEMA
(in paragraphs 2.6 of its notice of motion) the applicant
in this
matter was entitled to rely on section 32(2) of NEMA. This section
has further been held to “
free
the court from the fetter of ordinary principles, on the basis of
compliance with certain conditions
”
[7]
.
[25]
In these circumstances, not only do I find
that the applicant has satisfied the abovementioned “conditions”
but I find
that the applicant should not be saddled with costs
despite the fact that it became the “unsuccessful” party,
once
the events set in motion by the DWS overtook the need for a
final interdict.
[26]
Having made the above finding however, I am
not of the view that it goes so far as to convert the applicant into
a “successful”
party, making it entitled to costs. To
reach that point, a determination would have had to be made on the
disputed facts or at
least on the question of whether the applicant
would have been entitled to a final interdict, an exercise which the
applicant elected
not to pursue. By the same token, the fourth
respondent also did not pursue the claim for an “opposite”
interdict referred
to askance in its papers.
[27]
Taking
all this into consideration, in the exercise of the court’s
discretion, I find that it would be equitable to order
each party to
pay its own costs. This would, it seems to me, be fair in the
circumstances
[8]
. In reaching
this conclusion, I have also taken into account that no final
determination had or could be made in respect of the
correctness of
the opinions of opposing experts relied on by the parties and
therefore neither party should be liable for the costs
of the other
party’s experts.
Order
[28]
The following order is made:
The
applicant and the fourth respondent shall each pay its own costs.
N
DAVIS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 7
November 2022
Judgment
delivered: 18
November 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant: Adv
B L Manentsa
Attorney
for the Applicant: Webber
Wentzel Attorneys, Johannesburg
c/o
Hills Incorporated, Pretoria
For
the Fourth Respondent: Adv
R Andrews
Attorney
for the Fourth Respondent: Dhooge
Law Inc, Benoni
c/o
Legal Serve Serve Centre, Pretoria
[1]
Germishuys
v Douglas Besproeiingsroad
1973
(3) SA 299
(NC) (
Germishuys
).
[2]
Reuben
Rosenblum Family Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another V Marsuban (Pty)
Ltd
(
Forward
Enterprises (Pty) Ltd and Others intervening
)
2003 (3) SA 547
(C) at 550C-D
[3]
Waste
Products Utilisation (Pty) Ltd v Wilkes
(
Biccari
interested party
)
2003 (2) SA 590
(W) at 597A.
[4]
Erasmus
v Grunow and Another
1980
(2) SA 793
(O) at 797H – 798C.
[5]
Van
Loggerenberg,
Erasmus
superior Court Practice
,
Second Edition at D1 – 55 (
Erasmus
)
[6]
This
duty of care emanates from section 28 of NEMA
[7]
Silvermine
Valley Coalition v Sybrand van der Spuy Boerderye and Others
20002
(1) SA 478 (CC) at 491 I.
[8]
See
the Oft-relied on case of
Fripp
v Gibbon & Co
1913 AD 354
at 363.
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